Members of Congress from areas hit hard by Hurricane Sandy want more than $60 Billion dollars to aid victims and repair the damage. While the storm was horrible, that's an astounding number that approaches the entire annual budget for the state of Florida!  Worse yet, the number has been swelled by pork laden pet projects lawmakers inserted in the legislation for things that have little or nothing to do with Hurricane Sandy.

  A few entries from the Hurricane Sandy pork menu:

•$2 million to repair damage to the roofs of museums in Washington, D.C., while many in Hurricane Sandy’s path still have no roof over their own heads.

•$150 million for fisheries as far away from the storm’s path as Alaska.

•$125 million for the Department of Agriculture’s Emergency Watershed Protection program, which helps restore watersheds damaged by wildfires and drought.

•$20 million for a nationwide Water Resources Priorities Study.

•$15 million for NASA facilities, though NASA itself has called its damage from the hurricane ‘minimal.’

•$50 million in subsidies for tree planting on private properties.

•$336 million for taxpayer-supported AMTRAK without any detailed plan for how the money will be spent.

•$5.3 billion for the Army Corps of Engineers – more than the Corps’ annual budget – with no statement of priorities about how to spend the money.

•$12.9 billion for future disaster mitigation activities and studies, without identifying a single way to pay for it.